makingqueerhistory
makingqueerhistory

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Queer Your Library

Reminder to request queer books from your libraries!

scifigrl47

And hey.

Check them out.

Libraries have limited shelf space. If the books don't get checked out or don't get checked out often enough, the can be 'weeded' as unnecessary.

Borrow books you've already read. Put them on the reshelve cart to show in library use. Ask the librarians if they can recommend something else 'like this.'

Every librarian I have ever met is willing to march into hell with a baseball bat and a smile that could cut steel to defend their patrons right to access info. But you make that INFINITELY easier for them if they have numbers.

If they can say, wow, this section has a lot of turnover, we can fight to keep it in the budget. This program got a turnout, we need more like it. This display keeps getting emptied, it needs to be expanded.

Give them the tools to fight with. Use your library. Support your library. Join the Friends, attend events, suggest events, ask for books, use Hoopla and Libby and Canva and everything they're spending their budget on. Go to the book sale, go to the website, go to town/city meeting if you have that ability.

Be a patron. The books you request could save someone you may never meet.

1968bullittmustang

Whenever a new banned book list comes around, I add all the books to my hold list for my library. That way the library will either order the book or put in a loan request from a neighboring library that already has it.

I admit rarely read them all simply because many are not to my taste as I'm extremely narrow in my reading. But I always keep a book for a few days before returning it, and then request a new one from the list.

I can't fork over the money to purchase these books myself, but I can ensure they get checked out in our library system and give them a better chance of staying on the shelves longer.

And if there is an LGBTQIA book I desperately want and no library in our system has it, I'll purchase it. I've got a good relationship with the circulation librarian in my town and if I ship the book directly to her, she'll add it to their system, and I'll just check it out. This is a win-win for both of us. She gets a new book at no cost to the library and I get to read a book I really want but don't have room for at home.

Also, I recommend using Libby, Hoopla, or whatever Ebook system your library has. The more it gets used, the more money they are allocated to support it in the future.

And that goes for all Library services. The more traffic a service gets, the more money they are allocated for it in the future.

If you don't know what your library offers, go inside and ask. Every librarian I've ever met loves to help and answer questions. And some libraries have the coolest and most esoteric things on offer.

So try to support all the services your library has to offer!

Happy Pride! 💖🧡💛💚💙💜

LibrarylandGoddamn I love librariesThis is gonna be my new...Pinned post
roach-works
cowboycthulhu asked:

Hey bestie whats a narrow boat? I saw you tag that on something you reblogged and I'm pretty curious now!

elodieunderglass answered:
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- Terry Darlington, Narrow Dog to Carcassone

A narrowboat (all one word) is a craft restricted to the British Isles, which are connected all over by a nerve-map of human-made canals. To go up and down hills, the canals are spangled with locks (chambers in which boats can be raised or lowered by filling or emptying them with water.) As Terry says above, the width of the locks was somewhat randomly determined, and as a result, the British Isles have a narrow design of lock - and a narrowboat to fit through them. A classic design was seventy feet long and six feet wide. Starting in the 18th century, and competing directly with trains, canal “barges” were an active means of transport and shipping. They were initially pulled along the towpaths by horses, and you can still see some today!

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Later, engines were developed.

Even after the trains won the arms race, it was a fairly viable freight service right up until WW2. It’s slow travel, but uses few resources and requires little human power, with a fairly small crew (of women, in WW2) being capable of shifting two fully laden boats without consuming much fossil fuel.

In those times the barges were designed with small, cramped cabins in which the boaters and their families could live.

During its heyday the narrowboat community developed a style of folk art called “roses and castles” with clear links to fairground art as well as Romani caravan decor. They are historically decorated with different kinds of brass ornaments, and inside the cabins could also be distinctively painted and decorated.

Today, many narrowboats are distinctively decorated and colorful - even if not directly traditional with “roses and castles” they’ll still be bright and offbeat. A quirky name is necessary. All narrowboats, being boats, are female.

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After a postwar decline, interest in the waterways was sparked by a leisure movement and collapsing canals were repaired. Today, the towpaths are a convenient walking/biking trail for people, as they connect up a lot of the mainland of the UK, hitting towns and cities. Although the restored canals are concrete-bottomed, they’re attractive to wildlife. Narrowboats from the 1970s onward started being designed for pleasure and long-term living. People enjoy vacationing by hiring a boat and visiting towns for a cuter, comfier, slower version of a campervan life. And a liveaboard community sprang up - people who live full-time on boats. Up until the very restrictive and nasty laws recently passed in the UK to make it harder for travelling peoples (these were aimed nastily at vanlivers and the Romani, and successfully hit everyone) this was one of the few legal ways remaining to be a total nomad in the UK.

Liveaboards can moor up anywhere along the canal for 28 days, but have to keep moving every 28 days. (Although sorting out the toilet and loading up with fresh water means that a lot of people move more frequently than that.) you can also live full-time in a marina if they allow it, or purchase your own mooring. In London, where canal boats are one of the few remaining cheapish ways to live, boats with moorings fetch the same prices as houses. It can be very very hard for families to balance school, parking, work, and all the difficulties of living off-grid- but many make it work. It remains a diverse community and is even growing, due to housing pressures in the UK. Boats can be very comfortable, even when only six feet wide. When faced with spending thousands of pounds on rent OR mooring up on a nice canal, you can see why it seems a romantic proposition for young people, and UK television channels always have slice-of-life documentaries about young folks fixing up their very own quirky solar-powered narrowboat. I don’t hate; I did it myself.

If you’re lucky, you might even meet some of the cool folks who run businesses from their narrowboats: canal-side walkers enjoy bookshops, vegan bakeries, ice-cream boats, restaurants, artists and crafters. There are Floating Markets and narrowboat festivals. It’s generally recognised that boaters contribute quite a lot to the canal - yet there are many tensions between different kinds of boaters (liveaboards vs leisure boaters vs tourists) as well as tensions with local settled people, towpath users like cyclists, and fishermen. I could go on and on explaining this rich culture and dramas, but I won’t.

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Phillip Pullman’s Gyptians are a commonly cited example of liveaboards - although they were based on the narrowboat liveaboards that Pullman knew in Oxford, their boats are actually Dutch barges. Dutch barges make good homes but are too wide to access most of the midlands and northern canals, and are usually restricted to the south of the UK. So they’re accurate for Bristol/London/Oxford, and barges are definitely comfier to film on. (Being six feet wide is definitely super awkward for a boat.) but in general Dutch barges are less common, more expensive and can’t navigate the whole system.

However, apart from them, there are few examples of narrowboat depictions that escaped containment. So it’s quite interesting that there is an entire indigenous special class of boat, distinctive and highly specialised and very cute, with an associated culture and heritage and folk art type, known to all and widely celebrated, and ABSOLUTELY UNKNOWN outside of the UK - a nation largely known around the world for inflicting its culture on others. They’re a strange, sweet little secret - and nobody who has ever loved one can resist pointing them out for the rest of their lives, or talking about them when asked to. Thank you for asking me to.

elodieunderglass

Thank you for reblogging this and reminding me how much I like boats

prismatic-bell
elderinternetresurrection

Btw, privatization is stealing from *you.* You are the public in "publicly owned." Oligarchs are coming in to take the things we all share ownership of as Americans, like Medicare, Social Security, National Parks, PBS and scrapping them for parts they find profitable.

The right is planning to rob us and quite literally want us to thank them for the privilege by calling it "government efficiency."

nudityandnerdery
hidefdoritos

PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT:

Go for the bigger blanket.

Are you thinking of making or buying a blanket? There is no universe in which you will want a smaller blanket. Meanwhile, you have free will, and you can choose this universe to have a bigger blanket. Your potential to snuggle will unlimited by the boundaries of simple cloth.

Go for the bigger blanket.

heteroeroticsubtext
kaijutegu

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PLEASE BE HETEROSEXUAL PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE

kaijutegu

I should probably explain that.

These two are American crocodiles! They are a vulnerable species and it's been decades since Sanibel Island has had breeding American crocodiles, and because of how safe the island is for animals- more than 75% is a nature reserve- it would be an excellent spot for them to breed! This would be a wonderful place to raise baby crocodiles!

despondent-beauty

Apparently, homosexual behavior is pretty common in American crocodiles? At least according to the St. Augustine Crocodile Farm study, which was conducted 40 years ago and might have methodological flaws. I haven't checked.

kaijutegu

That study was on American alligators! I have a whole big write up of it here if you want to see that talks about some of the methodologies and implications of the results!

kaijutegu

They've been spotted again!

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Same pond, same position, slightly different location on the shoreline. Apparently the bigger one is a fine pillow.

kaijutegu

GODDAMMIT THEY'RE LESBIANS

kaijutegu

This is in addition to the OTHER female/female crocodile pair on Sanibel, who are engaging in courtship in this picture. This is one of the girls about half a second from mounting the other and engaging in cloacal rubbing. I love being friends with the wildlife biologists down there, they are so kind to tell me about the large lizard-esque lesbian lovefest that this year's AmCroc breeding season has become.

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kaijutegu

So uh

One of the lesbians just moved into some lady's back yard and built a nest.

Now, these could be duds. But they might not be!! The new lady could have shown up gravid or retained sperm. Or we could be looking at something highly unusual and there's gonna be a litter of crocodile Jesuses.

Either way, this is EXTREMELY exciting. Let's go, lesbians!!!

SCIENCE!